Poetry for Students, Volume 31

(Ann) #1

intervention when faced with natural fury. In
contrast with the image from the Gospels of
Christ calming the waters of the Sea of Galilee,
which the girl invokes in the midst of the hurri-
cane, she perishes in the hurricane. Even after
her death, the raw power of nature seems to
triumph a second time. The fisherman who sees
the wreck from the beach sees the girl’s hair rising
and falling in the motion of the rolling waves,
looking like seaweed, as if there had been a trans-
formation of the girl from the human to the
vegetable realm.


Sacrifice
Two aspects of sacrifice are shown in the poem,
one the result of the captain’s stubborn pride.
Because he refuses to heed the advice of the old
sailor and because he is defiant in the face of an


overpowering hurricane, the captain actually
sacrifices his daughter and his crew to his pride.
But once he is caught in the grip of catastrophe,
he sacrifices himself for his daughter by giving
her his greatcoat. It is, however, in vain, even if
the captain gives her his coat still foolishly boast-
ing of his own power to withstand the storm.

STYLE

Archaic Language
Although Longfellow is understood to be writing
about an event that occurred only a year or so
before the composition of the poem—the ship-
wreck of the schoonerFavoriteon the reef called
Norman’s Woe near Gloucester, Massachusetts—
he writes his fictionalized account of the event

TOPICS FOR
FURTHER
STUDY

 Choose an event from the news or recent
history and tell its story in the form of a
ballad.
 The admonition that pride precedes a fall is
commonplace and often accurate. In ‘‘The
Wreck of the Hesperus,’’ pride is the cause of
a disaster. Drawing on your own experience,
write a story in which the protagonist is
hamstrung by pride and painful consequen-
ces follow.
 ‘‘The Wreck of the Hesperus’’ is based on an
actual shipwreck. Research the subject of
maritime disasters in the first half of the nine-
teenth century in the vicinity of the New Eng-
land coast. Consider questions like these:
Were there many? What, if anything, did
they have in common? What were the social
and economic effects of shipwrecks? Did they
contribute to advances in shipbuilding? Pre-
pare a written report and an oral report to be
delivered in front of your class. Supplement
the oral report with pictures, paintings, or
drawings of shipwrecks from that era.

Once the inevitability of shipwreck is clear,
the captain wraps his daughter in his great-
coat before he lashes her to the mast in the
hope of saving her. Although his sacrifice
comes to naught and is necessitated by his
own error in judgment, it does show his stat-
ure. Prepare a questionnaire and interview
half a dozen people regarding their experi-
ence of sacrifice, addressing whether the sac-
rifices were ones that they made or which
were made for them and discussing the
results that followed from those sacrifices.
From the epics of Homer through contem-
porary literature and film, shipwrecks have
served as significant matter for literature
and painting. In a substantial essay, survey
the use of shipwreck as a theme or device in
literature and art, or choose a particular
writer or artist, like Homer, William Shake-
speare, Charles Dickens, or Joseph Mallord
William Turner, for example, and show how
shipwreck figures in his or her work.

The Wreck of the Hesperus

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